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Brewers' all-time Top 5 in-season trades

Brewers' all-time Top 5 in-season trades

With the Trade Deadline approaching, MLB.com highlights the Brewers' trades for Don Sutton and CC Sabathia as their top moves of all time

By Adam McCalvy
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MLB.com |

Will the Brewers swing a deal before the July 31 Trade Deadline? Sometimes it takes years to determine how well a team did in a trade. With the benefit of hindsight, the following are the five most notable trades in franchise history that were conducted during the regular season, according to Adam McCalvy. Agree? Disagree? Comment below:

Before there was CC Sabathia, there was Sutton, who was already considered a future Hall of Famer when the Brewers added him for the 1982 playoff push. He went 4-1 with a 3.29 ERA in seven regular season starts, the biggest a duel with Baltimore's Jim Palmer on the final day of the season, with the American League East crown on the line. Boosted by two Robin Yount home runs, Sutton worked eight innings and limited the Orioles to two runs for the Brewers' first division title.

Sabathia strapped a postseason-starved franchise on his broad back, going 11-2 with a 1.65 ERA in 17 regular season starts after the trade and leading the Brewers to their first playoff appearance in 26 years. He made his final three starts on three days' rest and, despite pitching only three months in the National League, led the circuit with seven complete games, including a four-hit gem in the regular-season finale that clinched the Wild Card.

LaPorta was the Brewers' top prospect at the time, but has struggled to get established in Cleveland. The best player in Cleveland's haul proved to be Brantley, who was a player to be named in the original swap.

The Brewers were one year away from their breakthrough season when they acquired the left-handed Caldwell, who would win 22 games in 1978 and go on to become the Brewers' record holder for complete games (81) and second in club history with 102 wins and 1,604 2/3 innings. He pitched for the Brewers through 1984.

If Greinke hadn't been acquired in the offseason, he would be on this list. When it was clear he would not re-sign with the Brewers, general manager Doug Melvin pitted the Angels against the Rangers -- AL West rivals -- for Greinke's services, and wound up with the Brewers' shortstop of the future -- Segura, who was an All-Star the following season -- and two top pitching prospects. Time will tell how those pitchers pan out, but considering the Angels missed the postseason and then lost Greinke to free agency, the Brewers look like clear winners in the deal.